|
|
|
Woollen dress. Photo: George Serras.
|
Woollen dress
By the 1880s wool was Australia's most important export. Thousands of fleeces were shipped to Britain's mills to be scoured, carded, combed, spun, dyed and woven into cloth.
Some of the wool eventually returned to Australia — as bolts of fabric or ready-made clothing, drapery and furnishings.
The Faithfull family of Springfield station, near Goulburn, New South Wales, grew wealthy supplying wool to Britain.
In about 1885, one Faithfull daughter bought this dress from David Jones department store in Sydney.
This pink fine wool dress consists of a bodice and skirt, made in about 1885.
It represented the latest in British fashion, but its origins probably lay close to home.
It is made of fine wool of the type grown on Springfield.
> More on the Springfield collection
|